4.7 Article

Indirect effects of COVID-19 on the environment: How plastic contamination from disposable surgical masks affect early development of plants

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 436, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2022.129255

Keywords

Polypropylene; Non-woven fabric; Brassica napus; Root system architecture

Funding

  1. Ja?nos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary [BO/00181/21/4]
  2. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities, Hungary [UNKP-21-5-SZTE-567]

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Personal protective equipment, especially disposable masks, used during the COVID-19 pandemic has heavily burdened the environment and can affect plant growth. Further research is urgently needed to understand the effects of plastic pollution on plant-soil interactions.
Personal protective equipment, used extensively during the COVID-19 pandemic, heavily burdened the environment due to improper waste management. Owing to their fibrous structure, layered non-woven polypropylene (PP) disposable masks release secondary fragments at a much higher rate than other plastic waste types, thus, posing a barely understood new form of ecological hazard. Here we show that PP mask fragments of different sizes induce morphogenic responses in plants during their early development. Using in vitro systems and soil-filled rhizotrons, we found that several PP mask treatments modified the root growth of Brassica napus (L.) regardless of the experimental system. The environment around the root and mask fragments seemed to influence the effect of PP fabric fragment contamination on early root growth. In soil, primary root length was clearly inhibited by larger PP mask fragments at 1 % concentration, while the two smallest sizes of applied mask fragments caused distinct, concentration-dependent changes in the lateral root numbers. Our results indicate that PP can act as a stressor: contamination by PP surgical masks affects plant growth and hence, warrants attention. Further investigations regarding the effects of plastic pollution on plant-soil interactions involving various soil types are urgently needed.

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